Steven Tredennick was previously the chair of Paul Hasting’s Houston corporate practice.
Concho & RSP Permian Have Gibson Dunn and V&E Lead $9.5B Shale Oil Deal
In the biggest M&A deal in the history of the Permian Basin, Midland-based Concho Resources is buying rival oil producer RSP Permian for $9.5 billion in an all stock transaction.
McGinnis Lochridge Adds Corporate Partner
Clarke Heidrick was most recently at Graves Dougherty.
Sheppard Mullin Adds Bill Mateja in Dallas
The Texas Lawbook has learned that prominent white-collar criminal defense attorney Bill Mateja, who represents Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in his ongoing legal battles, is joining two fellow partners from the Dallas office of Polsinelli in kicking off Sheppard Mullin’s Texas operations.
Texas Lawbook Exclusive: New Federal Judge Karen Gren Scholer’s ‘Crazy Busy’ Three Weeks
As the first new U.S. District judge in North Texas in more than a decade, Karen Scholer has undertaken a fevered pace her first 18 days on the bench. She’s hired two law clerks, been assigned 300 civil cases, conducted 55 status conferences and set two lawsuits for trial. In an exclusive Texas Lawbook interview, Judge Scholer discusses the nomination and vetting processes, the “judicial emergency” facing the federal courts in Texas and her first three weeks on the job.
Sabre’s Top Lawyer, Rachel Gonzalez, Heads to Starbucks
Rachel Gonzalez, who has held senior in-house legal positions at several Texas companies, will no longer have to pay for a cup of coffee starting next month.
Sheppard Mullin Pulling Together Partners in Dallas
The Texas Lawbook has learned that two partners from the Dallas office of Polsinelli and two lawyers from K&L Gates’ office in Dallas have already joined Sheppard Mullin’s operation.
Chamberlain Hrdlicka Adds Houston Labor and Employment Shareholder
Diana Pérez Gomez was previously at Martin, Disiere, Jefferson & Wisdom.
Bracewell Attorneys Receive Awards from UH Law Center
Richard Whiteley and Stacianne Wilson were selected as the winners of the President’s Award and Rising Star Award, respectively.
Is the DOL’s Fiduciary Rule Dead – or Only Mostly Dead?
A recent decision by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals vacated the Department of Labor’s so-called fiduciary rule, a set of regulations which would require that all retirement investing advice provided by financial professionals be in the best interest of their clients. The law’s uncertain future now rests in the hands of the Trump administration’s DOL. Timothy G. Verrall and Ron Chapman, Jr. of Ogletree Deakins provide an analysis.